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SiaProgrammingPython
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= I/O =
<<TableOfContents(2)>>
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The modules sys and os provide the basic interface to the operating system.
The module os creates a portable abstraction layer which is used by high-level modules like glob, socket, thred, time, fcntl.

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The module [[http://docs.python.org/lib/module-sys.html|sys]] provides access to system-specific parameters
by the interpreter.

=== Example argv ===
{{{#!python
#system1.py
import sys
print sys.argv
}}}

{{{
run system1.py parameter1 parameter2
['system1.py', 'parameter1', 'parameter2']
}}}
The script prints the command line arguments that are passed to the script. argv[0] is the script name

A more sophisticated way of evaluating command line arguments is provided by the module
[[http://docs.python.org/lib/module-optparse.html|optparse]]
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The module [[http://docs.python.org/lib/module-os.html|os]] is a portable
operating system interface.

Some examples:

 * {{{os.system()}}} Executes the command (a string) in a subshell
 * {{{os.mkdir()}}} Creates a directory
 * {{{os.remove()}}} Deletes a file
 * {{{os.path.isdir()}}} Test if directory
 * {{{os.path.isfile()}}} Test if file
 * {{{os.path.exists()}}} Test if file or directory exists
 * {{{os.path.getsize()}}} Size of a file
 * {{{os.path.basename()}}} Base name of pathname
 


== Modules glob ==

The module [[http://docs.python.org/lib/module-glob.html|glob]] finds all the pathnames matching a specified pattern according to the rules used by the Unix shell.

The following example looks for all pdf files in the current working directory and converts them into postscript files.
{{{#!python
#!/usr/bin/env python
import os,glob

filelist=glob.glob('*.pdf')
for f in filelist:
    psfilename=f.split('.')[0]+'.ps'
    cmd='pdftops '+f+' '+psfilename
    print cmd
    os.system(cmd)
}}}

SiaProgrammingPython

Interaction with the operating system

The modules sys and os provide the basic interface to the operating system. The module os creates a portable abstraction layer which is used by high-level modules like glob, socket, thred, time, fcntl.

Module sys

The module sys provides access to system-specific parameters by the interpreter.

Example argv

Toggle line numbers
   1 #system1.py
   2 import sys
   3 print sys.argv

run system1.py parameter1 parameter2
['system1.py', 'parameter1', 'parameter2']

The script prints the command line arguments that are passed to the script. argv[0] is the script name

A more sophisticated way of evaluating command line arguments is provided by the module optparse

Module os

The module os is a portable operating system interface.

Some examples:

  • os.system() Executes the command (a string) in a subshell

  • os.mkdir() Creates a directory

  • os.remove() Deletes a file

  • os.path.isdir() Test if directory

  • os.path.isfile() Test if file

  • os.path.exists() Test if file or directory exists

  • os.path.getsize() Size of a file

  • os.path.basename() Base name of pathname

Modules glob

The module glob finds all the pathnames matching a specified pattern according to the rules used by the Unix shell.

The following example looks for all pdf files in the current working directory and converts them into postscript files.

Toggle line numbers
   1 #!/usr/bin/env python
   2 import os,glob
   3 
   4 filelist=glob.glob('*.pdf')
   5 for f in filelist:
   6     psfilename=f.split('.')[0]+'.ps'
   7     cmd='pdftops '+f+' '+psfilename
   8     print cmd
   9     os.system(cmd)

LehreWiki: SiaProgrammingPythonSystem (last edited 2008-04-21 12:09:59 by anonymous)